IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Clinton Street West, NOTTINGHAM, NG1 3DN

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Clinton Street West, NG1 3DN by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (1855 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Furley & Co. upper floors on Clinton Street West
A Watson Fothergill building from 1896. The hanging garden effect is not part of the original design.
Image: © David Lally Taken: 10 Apr 2010
0.00 miles
2
Furley & Co.
A Watson Fothergill building from 1896 on the corner of Lower Parliament Street and Clinton Street West. Now, as can be seen, the ground floor is occupied by Lloyds TSB and the offices above are To Let by Innes England.
Image: © David Lally Taken: 10 Apr 2010
0.01 miles
3
Furley and Co, gable detail
On the corner of Lower Parliament Street and Clinton Street. The roof ridge tiles bristle with anti-pigeon spikes, so the enterprising birds perch on the roof slope. Watson Fothergill building from 1896 http://www.geograph.org.uk/article/The-Buildings-of-Watson-Fothergill/2#furley-and-co-lower-parliament-streetclinton-street-nottingham .
Image: © David Lally Taken: 2 Oct 2010
0.01 miles
4
12-16 Lower Parliament Street, Nottingham
A lesser work of Watson Fothergill, but still recognisably his (e.g. the dormers are similar to these Image]). Built 1896. Grade II listed. Originally occupied by Furley & Co., provision merchants, and now a branch of Lloyds Bank. Watson Fothergill, or Fothergill Watson as he began life, is Nottingham's Victorian architectural superstar. Walking around the city, it's not long before his idiosyncratic buildings jump out. Drawing on English traditions in a style sometimes labelled as Domestic Revival, his copious use of polychromatic bands of stone, timberwork and carved detail are very distinctive. In lesser hands, a mass of features results in an overwrought jumble, but Fothergill, despite apparently never working outside Nottinghamshire, and rarely even outside the city, was clearly skilled enough to blend everything together successfully. Close-ups: Image], Image
Image: © Stephen Richards Taken: 17 Jun 2012
0.01 miles
5
Clinton Street West
Looking towards Lower Parliament Street and the Victoria Centre from the corner of Lincoln Street. The dormered red-brick building is Watson Fothergill's Furley's store. The concrete block on the right was built on the site of the brick-lined railway cutting to the south of Victoria Station, between Parliament Street and Thurland Street Tunnel.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 30 Apr 2013
0.01 miles
6
Detail of Watson Fothergill's Furley & Co, Lower Parliament Street
On the corner of Clinton Street West and Lower Parliament Street and now a bank with offices (to let) above, this Watson Fothergill building was originally a shop, commissioned by Furley & Co, high-class provision merchants. The two terra-cotta panels depict sugar-cane being cut (left) and boiled (right), complementing two oriental panels under the identical window to the left http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1824216 .
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 11 May 2010
0.01 miles
7
Part of Lower Parliament Street in Nottingham
The now closed Antibo restaurant.
Image: © Jeremy Bolwell Taken: 12 May 2019
0.01 miles
8
Nottingham: a bio-gas bus in Parliament Street
Nottingham City Transport claims its new fleet of 53 Scania bio-gas double-deckers is the largest in the world. Advertisements on the buses read "Nottingham City Transport is supporting Nottingham's vision to be the cleanest and greenest city ... [these buses] will make a significant reduction to our carbon footprint and improvement to the air quality in Nottingham". This one offered a comfortable ride to Trent Bridge.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 24 Aug 2017
0.01 miles
9
Detail of Watson Fothergill's Furley & Co, Lower Parliament Street
On the corner of Clinton Street West and Lower Parliament Street and now a bank with offices (to let) above, this Watson Fothergill building was originally a shop, commissioned by Furley & Co, high-class provision merchants. Ken Brand's Nottingham Civic Society monograph explains that the terra-cotta panels appropriately depict men plying a sampan (carrying China tea towards Furley's perhaps) and an oriental market. To see the window to the right, click http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1853606 .
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 22 Apr 2010
0.01 miles
10
Fothergill reflected
What Nottingham's most celebrated High Victorian architect, Watson Fothergill, might have made of the brutal concrete of the Victoria Centre is easy to imagine - here parts of the facade and dormered roof of his shop for the grocers Furley & Co are reflected in its dreary Lower Parliament Street facade.
Image: © John Sutton Taken: 22 Apr 2010
0.01 miles
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